Time for the Champagne Goggles?

Back in early February, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama each had a couple of wins under their belt and were close in pledged delegates and in the overall vote total.

Clinton's institutional support from within the Democratic Party allowed her to build a commanding lead in superdelegates over Obama and as a result, hold the lead in overall delegates.

But that was before Super Tuesday, which turned out to be a draw. And before Obama went on a run of 12 straight victories in February. And before Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rev. Wright, Bosnia, Colombian trade deals, NAFTA and Bill Clinton unplugged on the campaign trail.

Despite several rough weeks, Obama has momentum and is rapidly closing in on surpassing Clinton's superdelegate total. In the ABC News delegate estimate, Clinton has just three more superdelegates than Obama. (Compare that to her lead of over 60 superdelegates at Super Tuesday.)

Obama picked up four new superdelegates today, including Jennifer McClellan, a Clinton convert. Clinton had a net gain of zero today because Rep. Heath Shuler's endorsement was negated by McClellan's defection.

Now with just four weeks and six primaries remaining on the Democratic nomination calendar, the chase for the remaining 260-some uncommitted superdelegates is on.

Clinton followed up her squeaker in Indiana with a 90-minute meeting at the DCCC in Washington with seven uncommitted superdelegates, per ABC News' Jake Tapper, including Rep. Chris Carney of Pennsylvania.

ABC News' Zach Wolf and Matt Jaffe report that Clinton said that she met with Members of Congress and talked about solutions for seating the delegates from Florida and Michigan.

"There was a demonstration here right before I got here from West Virginia and I think that everybody realizes that we've got to resolve what's going to happen with the delegates from Florida and Michigan," Clinton said. "And I'll continue to emphasize and stress that we cannot disenfranchise those voters and I hope we'll have a resolution."

ABC News' Political Unit reached out to over 60 of the approximately 80 uncommitted Members of Congress and DNC members in the Washington DC area who are uncommitted superdelegates.

The overwhelming majority of the uncommitted superdelegates reached by ABC News have no plans to publicly endorse right now and most said they will wait until all of the voting is complete on June 3. Last night's results were not enough to get these uncommitteds off of the fence.

Thursday it's Obama's turn to try and sway unpledged superdelegates with some facetime. ABC News' Sunlen Miller reports that Obama plans to hold his own session with uncommitteds while he is in Washington.

While the pundits were in overdrive speculating on when Clinton would bow out of the race, surrogates for the Obama campaign were extremely careful to not call for Clinton to pack it in and said repeatedly that it was her decision to make, ABC News' Miller reports.

On a conference call with reporters, Obama Campaign Manager David Plouffe was joined by top surrogates Sen. John Kerry, Sen. Claire McCaskill, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Gov. Janet Napolitano, and Gov Deval Patrick.

"It would be inappropriate and awkward and wrong with any of us to tell Senator Clinton when it is time for this race to be over," Sen. McCaskill said. "I am confident that she will do the right thing for the democratic nominee. And confident that she will work hard for the party."

Miller reports that the key talking point was crystal clear: stepping up the pressure calling for the superdelegates to make their decisions known now.

Gov Napolitano said, "Now is the time for superdelegates, as we wind our way down to the last states, to announce their preference."

Clinton added a quickly arranged stop in Shepherdstown, WV to signal that she is moving forward to next Tuesday's primary. ABC News' Eloise Harpert reports that when Clinton was asked if she is going to carry the fight to the floor of the convention, Clinton said she's not going anywhere until there is a clear winner.

"I'm staying in this race until there is a nominee and I obviously am going to work as hard as I can to become that nominee that is what I have done that is what I continue to do."